Oracle Tuesday rolled out an updated Oracle Database Appliance, called the X3-2, which adds virtualization to a product that combines database software with server, storage and networking, all in a ...
Despite official signals to the contrary, Wikibon community members report that Oracle support for virtualization of Oracle databases using non-Oracle hypervisors “has been stellar”, writes Wikibon ...
Oracle is the latest player to toss its hat into the virtualization ring with the company's latest announcement of Oracle VM, a virtualization platform based on the open source Xen hypervisor. At ...
Oracle showcased the Oracle Database Appliance X3-2 in a webcast last week. The new version provides up to twice the performance and supports over four times the storage of the original Oracle ...
If you run Oracle, you're likely contending with challenges with the increasing size and complexity of your database environments. In order to simplify operations, many enterprises are implementing ...
Oracle has rolled out version X3-2 of its Database Appliance for small and medium-sized businesses that it says delivers up to twice the speed and more than four times as much storage as the first ...
Oracle recently upgraded its server virtualization software, Oracle VM with a slew of enhancements. The company specifically highlights the management of the company's SPARC servers and its x86-based ...
The move comes less than a month after Oracle said it plans to acquire Sun Microsystems in a $7.4 billion bid. Virtual Iron, of Lowell, Mass., is a developer of server virtualization products, ...
Oracle launched another salvo in the virtual machine battle (see The battle over virtual machine software for a deeper analysis of the battle) by offering Oracle VM 3.3. As mentioned in that article, ...
Gartner predicts the cloud computing market will be worth $58 billion this year, as compared to $50 billion last year worldwide. That means big opportunities for top industry players including Amazon, ...
This year's Oracle OpenWorld user conference, which wrapped up Nov. 15 in San Francisco, drew an estimated 43,000 attendees for five days of keynotes, technical sessions, vendor exhibits and rock 'n' ...